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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 18, 2014 17:21:09 GMT -5
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Post by Joe Botting on Jan 19, 2014 12:02:14 GMT -5
Thanks for that, Peter - a nice little paper. I did my PhD with Liam as well, so it's very good to catch up on what he's been doing. It's not much of a surprise that you had a reduction in burrowing depth during an extinction, even purely on statistical grounds: if you take out a sustantial proportion of the diversity, that's likely to reduce the average range of depth by cutting out some of the extremes.
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 22, 2014 21:51:29 GMT -5
Liam is on Face Book Joe A lot of paleo people are on Face Book... Yes lets keep this thread open for other Journals etc.... PL
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 22, 2014 21:52:27 GMT -5
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 22, 2014 21:53:20 GMT -5
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 22, 2014 21:54:09 GMT -5
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 22, 2014 21:56:15 GMT -5
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 22, 2014 21:57:39 GMT -5
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Post by Joe Botting on Jan 23, 2014 10:14:31 GMT -5
Enalikter is an amazing beastie... I was looking at that paper the other day. It's interesting how you can have something with frontal appendages that are immediately recognisable as Leanchoilia-like, but such a different body form.
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Post by Joe Botting on Jan 23, 2014 10:29:07 GMT -5
Need to copy and paste it, but it's there. Caused a bit of a sensation when that came out, I remember - a Devonian anomalocarid was a bit unexpected, to say the least. The genus is Schinderhannes, by the way. As far as I'm aware, the jury is still out on how close it is to anomalocarids, but it's clearly somewhere in that general group. We're still waiting for an anomalocarid in Wales... ;D
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 23, 2014 11:01:35 GMT -5
That is great Joe! That means I can link my public FB pages here
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 23, 2014 11:02:28 GMT -5
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 23, 2014 11:11:00 GMT -5
What it means is anomalocarid must have survived the Silurian and Ordovician so the hunt is on in my part of the woods in ON Canada Need to copy and paste it, but it's there. Caused a bit of a sensation when that came out, I remember - a Devonian anomalocarid was a bit unexpected, to say the least. The genus is Schinderhannes, by the way. As far as I'm aware, the jury is still out on how close it is to anomalocarids, but it's clearly somewhere in that general group. We're still waiting for an anomalocarid in Wales... ;D
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Post by Joe Botting on Jan 23, 2014 11:11:25 GMT -5
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Post by pleecan (Peter Lee) on Jan 23, 2014 15:31:31 GMT -5
Nice article. Samuel Z. is also on FB ( Lots of Paleo people on FB).
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